bhaak1 writes: "The first — and hopefully annually — NetHack Cross-Variant Summer Tournament called Junethack has started last Sunday and runs until the end of August 14th.This tournament features Vanilla NetHack and several of its forks: SporkHack, UnNethack, AceHack and as a special bonus game — never seen on a public server before — NetHack 1.3d, the first version of the game called NetHack, released 1987. There are various achievements to gain, even for those poor souls that can't win this complex and sadistic game.The source code of the tournament management and website software is available for hacking on GitHub if you prefer hacking code to hacking monsters."

Procrastination drives much of my own gaming, and I think this holds for a large share of people. The closer a game comes to my "legit" computer usage, the more likely I will pick it up. So yes, game consoles do not stand a chance with me.

If the computer can accurately track my head and eyes when I'm entering passwords, I can do so all the time. Just imagine the privacy issues.
Does your boss know if you are distracted or working (frequent eye shifts)? How about recognizing people by their eye movements - biometric identity theft?
On the upside, you could use it to reliably research face mimics. Think about how much more $PRODUCT you could sell if you knew exactly which part of the commercial sucks.